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	<h1 id="firstHeading" class="firstHeading" lang="en">Hugin Preferences</h1>
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<h1><a name="General"><span class="mw-headline">General</span></a></h1>
<h2><a name="Resource_usage"><span class="mw-headline">Resource usage</span></a></h2>
<p>To speed things up <a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> keeps a copy in memory of as many input photos as possible.  With very large projects, this would use all your system memory, so set <b>Image cache memory</b> to a value below your available free RAM.  The default of 256MB should be ok for a system with 512MB of RAM, however this is very conservative, for large projects you will want to set this to a high proportion of your available system memory.
</p><p>The <a href="Hugin_Preview_window.html" title="Hugin Preview window">Preview window</a> is multi-threaded so can use more than one CPU/core if required. Set <b>Number of CPUs</b> to how many CPUs you wish to use.
</p>
<h2><a name="User_interface"><span class="mw-headline">User interface</span></a></h2>
<p>Changing the language of the user interface can be useful e.g. if you want to test your new <a href="Hugin_translation_guide.html" title="Hugin translation guide">translation</a>.
</p><p>Usually, <a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> will use the current locale to determine the language of buttons, menus etc...
Set the <b>Language</b> if you need to switch languages temporarily or if you are using a platform such as Windows95 that doesn't support localised software.  Hugin won't change language immediately, you will need to stop and restart it.
</p><p>The "language" option in the Hugin Preferences doesn't work for the Mac version. On Mac OS X the system's country settings will be used instead: change the language setting there (i.e. drag the preferred language to the top of the list), and Hugin will reflect that when you restart the program. An alternative but more time consuming way to set another language than the current system language is to quit Hugin, reveal it's icon in the Finder, click on it and open the Information window (Cmd.-I). After deselecting all unwanted language options you can start Hugin in your preferred language.
</p><p>If the option <b>Copy log messages to clipboard</b> is activated, all log messages (from the control point detector or the assistant) are copied at the end to the clipboard.
</p><p>The option <b>Show hints about projections</b> activates or deactivates the hints in the <a href="Hugin_Fast_Preview_window.html" title="Hugin Fast Preview window">fast preview window</a>.
</p><p>Normally the images in the <a href="Hugin_Mask_tab.html" title="Hugin Mask tab">mask tab</a> and <a href="Hugin_Control_Points_tab.html" title="Hugin Control Points tab">control point tab</a> are rotated according to their orientation in the final panorama. If you disable the option <b>Autorotate images for display</b> the images are display as stored in the files (independent on their orientation in the panorama).
</p>
<h2><a name="Raw_converter"><span class="mw-headline">Raw converter</span></a></h2>
<p>In this section you can provide the paths to the external raw converters (dcraw, RawTherapee and darktable). For RawTherapee and darktable you should use the command line version (as indicated by -cli extension) and not the GUI executable.
</p><p>If you leave these fields empty the default names will be used. (The programs should be in the paths specified by the PATH variable.)
</p><p><b>Windows:</b> On Windows the paths can be read from registry when the raw converter is installed correctly. (For RawTherapee this works only for version 5.5 or later.)
</p><p><b>MacOS:</b> For MacOS the paths "/Applications/RawTherapee.app/Contents/MacOS/rawtherapee-cli" und "/Applications/darktable.app/Contents/MacOS/darktable-cli" to the corresponding app images is taken as default.
</p>
<h1><a name="File_names"><span class="mw-headline">File names</span></a></h1>
<h2><a name="File_options"><span class="mw-headline">File options</span></a></h2>
<p>Some <a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> actions generate large temporary files, change the <b>Temporary dir</b> to specify an alternative location for writing these files. One reason for setting this independently to the operating system default would be to use a RAM disk to speed up stitching.
</p><p>Note that intermediate stitching files are created in the output folder and not in this <b>Temporary dir</b>.
</p>
<h2><a name="Default_file_names"><span class="mw-headline">Default file names</span></a></h2>
<p>Here you can construct a default file name for saving the project and for the output prefix. You can always change the proposal when saving.
Several place holders can be used to build the file names.
</p>
<h1><a name="Assistant"><span class="mw-headline">Assistant</span></a></h1>
<p>The <a href="Hugin_Assistant_tab.html" title="Hugin Assistant tab">Assistant tab</a> automates the entire panorama creation process, these
settings allow you to customise the assistant.
</p>
<h2><a name="Image_loading"><span class="mw-headline">Image loading</span></a></h2>
<p>Select <b>Automatically align images after loading</b> to run the second <b>Align...</b>
step immediately after loading the images.
</p>
<h2><a name="Optional_assistant_steps"><span class="mw-headline">Optional assistant steps</span></a></h2>
<p><b>Detect vertical lines</b> will run <a href="Linefind.html" title="Linefind">linefind</a> to find vertical lines, which can help the assistant to level your panorama.
</p><p>Select <b>Remove cloud-like control points (Celeste)</b> to run <a href="Celeste_standalone.html" title="Celeste standalone">celeste</a> after detecting control points. Celeste will remove <a href="Control_points.html" title="Control points">Control points</a> set to clouds, this is useful because clouds will move several pixels between shots and are therefore bad scene objects to use for alignment.
</p><p>Select <b>Remove outlying control points by statistical method</b> to run <a href="Cpclean.html" title="Cpclean">cpclean</a>, this will try to remove control points with positions that are not credible under pairwise optimisation.
</p><p>By default the assistant chooses an approbate panorama projection, calculates the field of view of the panorama and canvas size and crops away the black border around the edges. The <b>user-defined output options</b> allows you to configure this step to your needs.
With <b>configure</b> a dialog window opens where you can define which steps the assistant should execute. You can define several different settings which are applied depending on several conditions. In each setting all conditions have to be fulfilled in order to apply this setting (the conditions are combined with an AND operator). Each condition consist of a variable (e.g. PanoHFOV, ImageCount), the operator and the value. Example would be <tt>ImageCount&gt;1</tt>, <tt>PanoHFOV&gt;100</tt> or <tt>Lens=~fisheye</tt>. The help text below the control lists all available variables and operators.
Then add these panorama output settings which should be applied for your use case. To do so use the context menu and select which one should be added.
With the help of the context menu you can also create new or delete existing settings. Several settings are test and applied (if fulfilled) in alphabetical order.
</p>
<h2><a name="Auto_align"><span class="mw-headline">Auto align</span></a></h2>
<p>Auto align uses the <a href="Hugin_Preferences.html#Control_Point_Detectors" title="Hugin Preferences">default control point detector</a> to generate <a href="Control_points.html" title="Control points">control points</a>
between pairs of images, set <b>Number of Ctrl Points per overlap</b> to control
the number of control points.  Note that although most pictures can be stitched
with just three or four control points, automatically generated points tend not
to be very evenly distributed, so this number should be set to ten or more.
</p><p><b>Note:</b> Hugins <a href="Cpfind.html" title="Cpfind">cpfind</a> does not support this parameters. So in default settings this parameter is ignored.
</p><p>The size of the output <b>Panorama Image Size</b> is usually set in the
<a href="Hugin_Stitcher_tab.html" title="Hugin Stitcher tab">Stitcher tab</a> where it is also possible to <b>Calculate Optimal Size</b>
based on the sizes of the input images.  The <b>Auto align</b> process
does something similar, though here you can set a smaller output as a percentage.
Generally setting a percentage of 70% leads to no great loss of quality due to
the way a camera <a href="CCD.html" title="CCD">CCD</a> samples data.
</p><p><br />
</p><p><br style="clear:both;" />
</p>
<h1><a name="Control_Points_Editor"><span class="mw-headline">Control Points Editor</span></a></h1>
<h2><a name="HDR_and_16bit_display"><span class="mw-headline">HDR and 16bit display</span></a></h2>
<p><a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> supports both <a href="HDR.html" title="HDR">HDR</a> and <a href="16bit.html" title="16bit">16bit</a> imaging.  These image formats
contain a lot more brightness and colour information than can be displayed
on a standard computer monitor, so Hugin only shows a rough representation
of these pictures.
</p><p>16bit data can have <i>linear</i> or <i>corrected</i> <a href="Gamma.html" title="Gamma">gamma</a>.  Linear images
appear very dark on many monitors, so set the <b>Curve</b> to  <b>gamma 2.2</b>.
</p><p>For HDR data, try setting the <b>Curve</b>
to <b>logarithmic</b>.
</p><p>Changes to the <b>HDR and 16bit display mode</b> require restarting Hugin to
take effect.
</p><p>The size of the magnifier on the <a href="Hugin_Control_Points_tab.html" title="Hugin Control Points tab">control points tab</a> can be configured here. Depending on your preferences select between the different sizes.
</p>
<h2><a name="Fine-tune"><span class="mw-headline">Fine-tune</span></a></h2>
<p><a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> helps position <a href="Control_points.html" title="Control points">control points</a> to within a fraction of a pixel distance automatically:
</p>
<ul><li>When <b>auto fine-tune</b> is selected in the <a href="Hugin_Control_Points_tab.html" title="Hugin Control Points tab">Control Points tab</a> while picking control points.</li>
<li>When clicking <b>Fine-tune</b> in the <a href="Hugin_Control_Points_tab.html" title="Hugin Control Points tab">Control Points tab</a></li>
<li>When picking <b>Fine-tune all Points</b> in the <a href="Panorama_Editor_window.html" class="mw-redirect" title="Panorama Editor window">Panorama editor window</a> <b>Edit</b> menu.</li></ul>
<ul><li><b>Patch width</b>, the size of the square of pixels taken from the left photo to match with the right photo when picking <a href="Control_points.html" title="Control points">control points</a>, reduce if this is taking a long time on your system.</li>
<li><b>Search area width</b>, the percentage area of the right photo that is searched when picking <b>control points</b>, reduce if this is taking a long time on your system.</li>
<li><b>Local search area width</b>, the region of the right photo searched when you click <b>Fine-tune</b> in the <a href="Hugin_Control_Points_tab.html" title="Hugin Control Points tab">Hugin Control Points tab</a> or <b>Fine-tune all Points</b> in the <a href="Panorama_Editor_window.html" class="mw-redirect" title="Panorama Editor window">Panorama editor window</a> <b>Edit</b> menu.</li>
<li><b>Correlation Threshold</b>. For each <b>Fine-tune</b>, <a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> calculates the quality of the <b>control points</b> match, raise this threshold to reject dubious matches.</li>
<li><b>Peak Curvature Threshold</b>, Currently unused.</li></ul>
<h2><a name="Rotation_search"><span class="mw-headline">Rotation search</span></a></h2>
<p>Enable this if your photos:
</p>
<ul><li>have a very wide angle <a href="Field_of_View.html" title="Field of View">Field of View</a> or <a href="Fisheye_Projection.html" title="Fisheye Projection">fisheye Projection</a>.</li>
<li>are tilted up or down, <a href="Control_points.html" title="Control points">control points</a> near the <a href="Zenith.html" title="Zenith">zenith</a> or <a href="Nadir.html" title="Nadir">nadir</a> may need to have full 360 degree rotation search</li></ul>
<p><br style="clear:both;" />
</p>
<h1><a name="Control_Point_Detectors"><span class="mw-headline">Control Point Detectors</span></a></h1>
<p><a href="Hugin.html" title="Hugin">Hugin</a> uses an internal or external tool for automatically creating <a href="Control_points.html" title="Control points">control points</a> for a set of images either when
</p>
<ul><li>clicking the <b>2. Align...</b> button in the <a href="Hugin_Assistant_tab.html" title="Hugin Assistant tab">Hugin Assistant tab</a> or</li>
<li>clicking the <b>Create control points</b> button in the <a href="Hugin_Photos_tab.html" title="Hugin Photos tab">Photos tab</a>.</li></ul>
<p><i>Note: If you have upgraded from an older release of Hugin, you will need to <b>Load Defaults</b> to update these preferences.</i>
</p><p>In the <b>Control Point Detector Programs</b> list box you can choose between several presets such as:
</p>
<ul><li><b><a href="Cpfind.html" title="Cpfind">Hugin's CPFind</a></b> - This is the internal general purpose control point generator of hugin.</li>
<li><b>Hugin's CPFind + Celeste</b> - This is the same as the <a href="Cpfind.html" title="Cpfind">CPFind</a> setting but it will also remove points in areas of sky using the celeste<a class="external" href="https://wiki.panotools.org/index.php?title=Celeste&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">[*]</a> tool. See <a href="Using_Celeste_with_hugin.html" title="Using Celeste with hugin">Using Celeste with hugin</a> for more details.</li>
<li><b>Cpfind (multirow/stacked)</b> - This is the same as the <a href="Cpfind.html" title="Cpfind">CPFind</a> setting, except that <a href="Align_image_stack.html" title="Align image stack">Align image stack</a> is used to match photos in <a href="Bracketing.html" title="Bracketing">bracketed</a> stacks.</li>
<li><b><a href="Autopano-sift-C.html" title="Autopano-sift-C">autopano-sift-C</a></b> - a C version of <a href="Autopano-sift.html" title="Autopano-sift">autopano-sift</a>, wwhich needs to be installed separately.</li>
<li><b><a href="Panomatic.html" title="Panomatic">Panomatic</a> (by Anael Orlinski)</b>, which needs to be installed separately.</li>
<li><b>autopano-sift-c (multirow/stacked)</b> - This is the same as the <a href="Autopano-sift-C.html" title="Autopano-sift-C">autopano-sift-C</a> setting, except that <a href="Align_image_stack.html" title="Align image stack">Align image stack</a> is used to match photos in <a href="Bracketing.html" title="Bracketing">bracketed</a> stacks.</li>
<li><b><a href="Align_image_stack.html" title="Align image stack">Align image stack</a></b> - part of Hugin suite. Note that align_image_stack is not a general purpose control point detector, but it is very effective for aligning images within stacks.</li>
<li><b>Align image stack FullFrameFisheye</b> - This the same as the <a href="Align_image_stack.html" title="Align image stack">Align image stack</a> setting above except with an additional setting suitable for fisheye images.</li></ul>
<p>Parameters for these tools can be customized in the <a href="Hugin_Parameters_for_Control_Point_Detectors_dialog.html" title="Hugin Parameters for Control Point Detectors dialog">Hugin Parameters for Control Point Detectors dialog</a> which you can access by clicking one of the buttons <b>Edit...</b> or <b>New...</b>.
</p><p>These <a href="Hugin_Parameters_for_Control_Point_Detectors_dialog.html" title="Hugin Parameters for Control Point Detectors dialog">parameters</a> are also helpful if you want to use a similar command line tool that isn't already listed. Click the <b>New...</b> button to configure a new preset to use in the <a href="Hugin_Assistant_tab.html" title="Hugin Assistant tab">Assistant</a> or the <a href="Hugin_Photos_tab.html" title="Hugin Photos tab">Photos tabs</a>.
</p><p>The <b>Set default</b> button will mark the preset selected in this list box to be used automatically in the <a href="Hugin_Assistant_tab.html" title="Hugin Assistant tab">Assistant tab</a> when clicking the <b>2. Align...</b> button.
</p>
<h1><a name="Stitching"><span class="mw-headline">Stitching</span></a></h1>
<p>The <b>Output format</b> defines the default output format for new projects. You can select TIFF, JPEG or PNG and the compression settings depending on the selecting format.
</p><p>Under blender you can select whether <a href="Enblend.html" title="Enblend">enblend</a> or <a href="Verdandi.html" title="Verdandi">the internal blender</a> is the default blender for new project. You can change it for existing projects on the stitcher tab<a class="external" href="https://wiki.panotools.org/index.php?title=Hugin_stitcher_tab&amp;action=edit&amp;redlink=1">[*]</a>.
</p><p><b>Important note:</b> The settings here are the defaults for <i>new projects</i>, change settings for the <i>current project</i> in the <a href="Hugin_Stitcher_tab.html" title="Hugin Stitcher tab">Hugin Stitcher tab</a>.
</p><p>The complete stitching process (reprojecting image, blend and fuse images...) can be done by PTBacherGUI or hugin_stitch_project. Select here which processor should be used:
</p>
<ul><li><a href="PTBatcherGUI.html" class="mw-redirect" title="PTBatcherGUI">PTBatcherGUI</a> can queue several projects and can also work unattended and shutdown the computer at the end (e.g. running over night)</li>
<li><a href="Hugin_stitch_project.html" title="Hugin stitch project">hugin_stitch_project</a> can only work on one project. It is not recommended to start several processes simultaneously.</li></ul>
<p>Select <b>Overwrite existing files</b> if existing file should be overwritten, otherwise you will be asked each time.
</p><p>PTBatcherGUI has two additional options:
</p>
<ul><li><b>Start stitching jobs immediately</b> will start the processing directly after adding a project to the queue. Otherwise you can select several project in the queue and start the processing in PTBatcherGUI at any later time.</li>
<li><b>Verbose output</b> will activate an additional log window which will print more details about the process.</li></ul>
<h1><span id="Stitching_(2)"></span><a name="Stitching_.282.29"><span class="mw-headline">Stitching (2)</span></a></h1>
<p><b>Exiftool options</b> allows you to customize which metadata are copied to intermediate and final image with exiftool. (Metadata can only be copied to blended and/or fused intermediate images, but not to remapped only images.)
</p><p>You can specify 2 argfile: The first one is used to copy metadata to all exposure layer or stacks. The second one is used for the final image(s). In the final ExifTool argfile you can also use placeholders to add some information about the panorama into the metadata (e.g. number of images, projections, field of view).
</p><p>When the option <b>Create Photo Sphere XMP data</b> is checked, the Photo Sphere XMP are automatically added to equirectangular images. These information are used by some viewer to display the panorama in an interactive viewer.
</p><p>Under <b>Advanced options</b> you can limit the number of threads for the called programs. The number 0 indicates to use maximum number of threads.
</p>
<h1><a name="Programs"><span class="mw-headline">Programs</span></a></h1>
<p>Here you can define programs for the different stitching steps and set default options for them.
</p>
<h2><a name="Nona"><span class="mw-headline">Nona</span></a></h2>
<p>Here you can set the <b>Default interpolator</b> used during stitching. <a href="Interpolation.html" title="Interpolation">Interpolation</a> is a quality setting, but the default of <b>Poly3 (Bicubic)</b> is good for most purposes. You are unlikely to notice any difference between interpolators other than that <b>Nearest neighbor</b> is fast but very low quality.
</p><p>You can <b>Create cropped images by default</b>, these <a href="Cropped_TIFF.html" title="Cropped TIFF">Cropped TIFF</a> images will speed up stitching, but some image editors do not process the offsets correctly.
</p><p><b>Use GPU for remapping</b> will activate experimental <a href="Nona.html" title="Nona">nona</a> code to remap images using the shading language of the <i>Graphics Processing Unit</i> in modern video hardware. However some projections and the translation parameters are not yet supported by this experimental code. In this case Nona will automatically switch back to CPU calculation.
</p>
<h2><a name="Enblend"><span class="mw-headline">Enblend</span></a></h2>
<p>The <b>Use alternative Enblend program</b> option allows you to use other tools with a similar interface
such as smartblend<a class="external" href="https://wiki.panotools.org/Smartblend">[*]</a>.
</p><p>Enblend supports a range of <b>Additional arguments</b> which depend on the actual version of enblend you are using. Since also other features and limitations may change depending on version number and building options it is recommended to download and read the version specific manual from <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="http://enblend.sourceforge.net/">Enblend's home page</a>.
An easy way to ask your version of Hugin about Enblend's version number is to add <i>-v</i> or <i>--version</i> to the line of arguments in the Stitcher tab, than stitch a simple panorama and have a look at the stitching log.
</p><p>Note that setting <b>Additional arguments</b> here will only effect new projects, to change <a href="Enblend.html" title="Enblend">enblend</a> and <a href="Enfuse.html" title="Enfuse">enfuse</a> settings for the current project use the <a href="Hugin_Stitcher_tab.html" title="Hugin Stitcher tab">Hugin Stitcher tab</a>.
</p>
<h2><a name="Enfuse"><span class="mw-headline">Enfuse</span></a></h2>
<p>If one of <b>Exposure fusion</b> output options is selected in the <a href="Hugin_Stitcher_tab.html" title="Hugin Stitcher tab">Stitcher tab</a> then <a href="Enfuse.html" title="Enfuse">enfuse</a> will be used to merge bracketed exposures during stitching.
</p>
<h1><a name="Misc"><span class="mw-headline">Misc</span></a></h1>
<h2><a name="Celeste"><span class="mw-headline">Celeste</span></a></h2>
<p>Often a project has many control points attached to clouds in the sky, this is usually unwanted as clouds move between photos. <a href="Using_Celeste_with_hugin.html" title="Using Celeste with hugin">celeste</a> will attempt to identify 'sky' control points and delete them.
</p>
<h2><a name="Photometric_optimizer"><span class="mw-headline">Photometric optimizer</span></a></h2>
<p>The photometric optimizer on the <a href="Hugin_Exposure_tab.html" title="Hugin Exposure tab">Exposure tab</a> samples the here given number of points and tries to determine with which <a href="Camera_response_curve.html" title="Camera response curve">camera response curve</a>, <a href="Vignetting.html" title="Vignetting">vignetting</a> and exposure compensation the images need to be stitch to get no changes in colour or luminescence. For difficult projects it can be helpful to increase this number.
</p>
<h2><a name="Warnings"><span class="mw-headline">Warnings</span></a></h2>
<p>Here you can activate or deactivate some warning messages or information boxes.
</p>
<h2><a name="Edit_cp_tool"><span class="mw-headline">Edit cp tool</span></a></h2>
<p>After adding or deleting control points with the cp tool on the fast preview window it is recommended to re-optimize the project. Here you can configure if this optimization should happen automatically or if you want to do it by yourself.
</p>
<h1><a name="Troubleshooting"><span class="mw-headline">Troubleshooting</span></a></h1>
<p>Sometimes when updating a hugin installation new features such as the settings for a new control point editor won't appear where expected. The cause might be a conflict with the preferences file of a previous version of hugin. A good idea before pressing the "Reset do defaults" button might be to back up the old preferences file since it is a plain text file that contains your specific settings in a readable format. Saving this file gives you the chance to recreate these individual settings later on. The name and location of the preferences file is this for the following platforms:
</p>
<ul><li>Linux: ".hugin" can be found in your home directory <b>(FIXME)</b></li>
<li>Mac OS X: the file "hugin Preferences" can be found in <i>Macintosh HD/Users/&lt;YourUserAccount&gt;/Library/Preferences/</i>. This folder is usually hidden by the system, so in Finder search the "Go to..." menu for the "go to folder..." command - or just use the keyboard shortcut shift+cmd+G. In the dialog insert <i>~/Library/Preferences/</i> and press the "open" button. Make sure Hugin isn't open and then either rename, move or delete this file to make Hugin start with the default preferences for that version.</li>
<li>Windows: the preferences are stored in the registry&#160;: <i>\HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\hugin</i></li></ul>
<p>Quit hugin, rename the preferences file (e.g. add the previous version number) and on the next start of hugin a new preferences file will be generated.
</p><p>Other fixes for occurring problems can be found in the <a href="Hugin_FAQ.html" title="Hugin FAQ">Hugin FAQ</a>.
</p><p><br style="clear:both;" />
</p>

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